The Corruption Of The Devil In Hawthorne's Young Goodman Brown

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Young Goodman Brown
“The only sin is the sin of being born,” said Samuel Beckett. From the day someone is born, they began to commit faults. Therefore, it is even corrupt to simply be born due to the fact that it is inevitable in humans to restrain from evil. Every person commits wrong doings and is unfaithful to God and the only cause of this is consequently because of the way humans are naturally built. In “Young Goodman Brown,” Nathaniel Hawthorne conveys the Devil as laid back to express how humans sin without any outside influence as distinctively seen through the characters of the Devil, Goodman Brown, and Puritans.

Hawthorne embodies the Devil to exhibit how humans are vulnerable to sin without any outside influence. First, the Devil …show more content…

Also, Brown recognizes a righteous woman walking through the forest “Who taught him his catechism in youth, and was still his moral and spiritual advisor” (Hawthorne 32). Brown’s catechism teacher is coincidently walking in the woods at the same time as Brown and the Devil because both are going to the meeting held by the Devil. The catechism teacher and Brown are both disobeying God by associating with the Devil which symbolizes how frequently humans violate God. Hawthorne incorporates the catechism woman to convey that everyone in society commit sins without influence from others. Likewise, the priest was informed by the deacon “That some of [their] community are to be [there] from Falmouth and beyond, and others from Connecticut and Rhode Island” (Hawthorne 33). The priest and the deacon discuss the other church members from different areas that will be appearing at the meeting held by the Devil also. Even the priest and deacon, who are devoted to God, are unfaithful because they associate with the Devil. Because of the sufficient amount of Puritans that are attending the meeting, this displays how Puritans commit immortality by their own judgment and no one else's. In the same way, the priest and deacon are talking quietly to each other in the woods “So strangely in the empty air, passed on through the forest, where no church had ever been gathered, nor solitary christian prayed” (Hawthorne 33). Brown is by himself contemplating his thoughts when he hears two familiar voices and recognizes they are the priest and the deacon. The priest and deacon are discussing the numerous other church members who are complying with the Devil as well. Thus, the church members in society are committing the equivalent sins as Goodman Brown is, suggesting all humans sin. Through the use of a religious woman, the deacon, and the priest, Hawthorne dramatically expresses

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